Teenager left almost bald after... - PHOTO+VIDEO

20:38 | 02.10.2014
Teenager left almost bald after... - PHOTO+VIDEO

Teenager left almost bald after... - PHOTO+VIDEO

A teen who was left almost bald after pulling her own hair out has finally been given the golden locks of her dreams.

Phoebe Ottomar, from Northampton, who suffers from trichotillomania, spent years tugging at her hair, leaving her with golf ball-sized bald patches.The 19-year-old was left devastated by the consequences of her habit - often refusing to leave the house - until she came across pioneering treatment that enabled her hair to grow back.Phoebe is now taking part this week in International No Pulling Week, aimed at raising awareness about her hair pulling condition, called trichotillomania.Phoebe said: 'I felt like a completely new person since I had my new hair system, it’s fair to say it really has changed my life.''I don’t think you realise how important hair is until you’ve barely got any.'For as long as I can remember I’ve always dreamt of having long hair, I used to be so envious of other girls in school.'I was over the moon when I read about Lucinda Ellery and finally realised there was a way to get my hair back.'It’s amazing that my real hair is actually growing now and I have my confidence back.'She said: 'I started pulling my hair out when I was really young and I can remember looking at the hair root and being really fascinated.'From there the pull became a release for me and I found it really therapeutic.'When I was little we used to live in China and I think maybe the move back to the UK was what started it off.'Then at secondary school it became worse - issues with friends and boys made me do it even more.'People would constantly ask me why my hair was so thin and why I always put it up.'Hair is so important to a teenage girl but I just didn’t have any and felt I couldn’t relate to any of the girls in my year.'I hated whenever conversation topics turned to hair. I constantly found myself scraping my hair back into a granny-style bun to try and hide the hideous bald patches.'I hated the windy weather as it would often blow the hairstyle out of place and reveal the sparse bits of hair. I would get so paranoid and stressed.'Phoebe would constantly pull at her hair - but no GP or specialist was able to say why.Phoebe said: 'I went to therapy and tried hypnosis but nothing worked. It was when my mum noticed me pulling at my hair that we realised I had trichotillomania.'She’d seen an article about it in a woman’s weekly magazine and she knew I had the condition straight away.'Finally after hours of research with research with mother Joanne, 45, Pheobe discovered an answer to her problems.(dailymail.co.uk)Bakudaily.Az

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